As ChatGPT faces more competitors, leading generative artificial intelligence company Anthropic has announced a new model to power its Claude chatbot, the company announced on Monday.
The company said its three new AI models, called Claude 3 Opus, Sonnet and Haiku, are its most powerful tools to date and lead the industry in terms of their ability to match human intelligence.
Founded in 2021, Anthropic was created by former employees of OpenAI, which developed ChatGPT, and has received funding from Google and partnered with Amazon to develop new technology.
The company features the release of an AI model that attempts to impose stricter guardrails than ChatGPT and other chatbot rivals.
But the approach has faced backlash after Google’s Gemini model, released last month, was criticized for gaffes such as producing images of ethnically diverse World War II Nazi troops. There is.
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Some industry observers have complained that chatbots have become less impressive as companies implement stricter controls in response to controversies over their technology going erratic or giving incorrect answers. It’s leaking.
Anthropic acknowledged that safety measures can be taken too far and said the new model avoids the “unnecessary rejections” that plagued previous releases.
“Opus, Sonnet, and Haiku are now significantly less likely to refuse to respond to prompts that are at the edge of the system’s guardrails than previous generation models,” the report said.
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Anthropic said its model Opus is the most powerful of the three models and can outperform its competitors on key benchmarks such as math.
Claude is considered one of the leading AI chatbot manufacturers and works closely with Amazon and the AWS cloud division that provides the company’s intensive computing needs.
It has received investments from Google and other leading Silicon Valley companies.
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Unlike its rivals, Anthropic’s Claude chatbot does not generate images, but only allows users to use them as requests for analysis.
Competing tools from OpenAI and Google generate images on request, but Anthropic executives don’t think customers are asking for this feature.
Like other AI giants, Anthropic faces lawsuits from content makers for stealing copyrighted material to build its models.
Universal and other music publishers sued Anthropic in U.S. court last year, accusing it of using copyrighted lyrics to train its systems and generate answers to user questions.